Jockstrip: The world as we know it.

TEMPE, Ariz., Oct. 25 (UPI) -- A Tempe, Ariz., woman who stabbed her lover during sex to drink his blood has been sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Tiffany Sutton -- who pleaded guilty in August to two counts of aggravated assault stemming from the February incident, and a previous violent encounter with a police officer during a trespassing arrest -- expressed remorse Tuesday before she was sentenced, The East Valley (Ariz.) Tribune reported Wednesday.

"I’m really sorry that all this went on," Sutton told Maricopa County Superior Court Judge David Udall. "I never meant to hurt anyone."

A police report said Sutton and her victim, Robert McDaniel, were drunk and high on drugs when he agreed to be tied up during sex. McDaniel later told police he became frightened and asked to be untied when Sutton attacked him with a knife.

She sliced his leg, punctured his arm, shoulder and back, and cut his neck and stomach before he managed to escape, court records say. She then chased him with a pickax until a friend intervened and called 911.

Sutton's mother said her daughter has struggled with mental health issues for most of her life and prison health records state that Sutton thought she was a vampire for several weeks after her arrest.

"Gov. Romney simply misspoke. He was referring to the recently released audiotape of Osama bin Laden and misspoke when referencing his name. It was just a brief mix-up," Madden said.

Obama was campaigning in New Hampshire later in the day and was asked for his reaction.

"I don’t pay too much attention to Mitt Romney," Obama said.

Dallas campaign targets 'lame' saggy pants

DALLAS, Oct. 25 (UPI) -- A cultural advocacy group called Hip Hop Government in Dallas launched a campaign Wednesday that puts down pants that reveal gluteal cleavage.

The group had the support of Deputy Mayor Dwaine Caraway, who has had no success in getting the city council to address the issue since he was elected in May, The Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram reported.

The group unveiled a design that will appear on 17 billboards citywide, donated by Clear Channel Outdoor.

It features the back view of a youth wearing pants so low, the happy faces on his underwear are clearly visible. The logo says: "Don't Be Lame, Elevate Your Game. Pull 'em Up!"

"We represent the citizens, and the citizens were having a problem looking at people with dirty underwear," Caraway told the newspaper. "Now we've found it doesn't take an ordinance nor does it take a resolution, because they're now seeing for themselves the need to respect themselves and a respect for society."

French bloggers proud to be lazy

PARIS, Oct. 25 (UPI) -- Self-professed lazy Internet users in France want personal "lazing around days" to protest the French government's call to be more productive.

The French enjoy 11 national holidays and 5 weeks of paid vacation annually, along with 35-hour work weeks. Recently President Nicolas Sarkozy called for workers to "work more to earn more," the Daily Telegraph reported from Paris.

A woman who identifies herself only as "Julie, a lawyer" set up a Web site in protest. The headline reads: "Lazy bones of the world, unite!"

The site offers guidelines on loafing and lazing on a personal day.

"Obviously, getting up is prohibited," the site says, adding baths and showers are out, and the dress code is pajamas or tracksuits, the Web site said.

The site recommends spontaneity in selecting lazing days, but also some courtesy.

"By midday one should start thinking about phoning the boss to inform of one's absence," the site says.

3 Lincoln documents surface in courthouse

SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Oct. 25 (UPI) -- Three documents signed by President Abraham Lincoln while he was a lawyer have turned up in a county recorder's office in Illinois.

The documents have been hanging on an office wall in the Sangamon County Courthouse in the state capital, Springfield, for years, The State Journal-Register reports. Recorder Mary Ann Lamm said she remembers a flap in the 1960s when her predecessor, Russ Gibbs, removed them from ledgers and used public money to get them framed.

Lincoln autographs are fairly common and can be bought for as little as $4,200. Documents with his signature are rare because autograph hunters went through legal archives immediately after his assassination, slicing off the signatures.

The Illinois Historic Preservation Agency and Lincoln Presidential Library apparently assumed anything from Sangamon County would already be in the archives.

The three documents involve ordinary financial transactions. In one, a woman signed a loan document after borrowing $125 from Lincoln to buy a house.

One is of some interest because it is dated June 9, 1860. At the time, Lincoln was winding up his legal practice as he prepared to run for president.

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